Colour-crafted phosphor-free white light emitters via in-situ nanostructure engineering

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Abstract

Colour-temperature (T c) is a crucial specification of white light-emitting diodes (WLEDs) used in a variety of smart-lighting applications. Commonly, T c is controlled by distributing various phosphors on top of the blue or ultra violet LED chip in conventional phosphor-conversion WLEDs (PC-WLEDs). Unfortunately, the high cost of phosphors, additional packaging processes required, and phosphor degradation by internal thermal damage must be resolved to obtain higher-quality PC-WLEDs. Here, we suggest a practical in-situ nanostructure engineering strategy for fabricating T c -controlled phosphor-free white light-emitting diodes (PF-WLEDs) using metal-organic chemical vapour deposition. The dimension controls of in-situ nanofacets on gallium nitride nanostructures, and the growth temperature of quantum wells on these materials, were key factors for T c control. Warm, true, and cold white emissions were successfully demonstrated in this study without any external processing.

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Min, D., Park, D., Lee, K., & Nam, O. (2017). Colour-crafted phosphor-free white light emitters via in-situ nanostructure engineering. Scientific Reports, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep44148

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